Tottenham Hotspur manager Mauricio Pochettino has remade his current club into a true Premier League title contender and UEFA Champions League regular. Since coming up from Southampton in 2014, Pochettino has improved Spurs to a club that is solidly among the best in the Premier League’s big six.

Spurs were the last team standing between the last two league champions, the last contender to get mathematically eliminated. His phenomenal work has been noticed by the biggest clubs in the world, and now White Hart Lane are looking to make sure he’s locked down on a longer term deal to make sure he stays put in north London.

As Harry Kane continues his assault on the Premier League scoring record book, one former Arsenal coach reflected on bypassing the chance to sign the Tottenham Hotspur striker. The reason why is what truly astounds- Liam Brady, former Arsenal Head of Youth Development and Academy Director, said that the young Englishman had too much body fat and not enough athleticism.

Manchester United are forsaking additional income for the honor of tradition by refusing to sell out Old Trafford naming rights. It’s a move that is almost universally popular, hasn’t changed, and likely won’t change any time soon, but it’s also one that could be potentially be costing them £26 million per season, a new corporate finance study says.

Kane also broke the great Alan Shearer’s record for most Premier League goals scored in a calendar year. After reaching his 100th Premier League scoring strike last weekend against Liverpool, becoming the second fastest to get there behind Shearer, the young Englishman was compared to Lionel Messi and Pele by his manager Mauricio Pochettino.

Today saw Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger playing some mind games with his opponent, Tottenham Hotspur, ahead of this weekend’s north London derby. Wenger gave his weekly news conference Thursday, and during the session he capitalized on the current Tottenham-diving narrative that has taken off since Spurs’ 2-2 draw at Liverpool last Sunday.

Providing perhaps the primary talking point in the play-acting debate is Spurs manager Mauricio Pochettino, who ignited controversy by saying football requires the ability to “trick your opponent,” while defending Alli.

The 2-2 Liverpool-Tottenham Hotspur draw at Anfield yesterday was truly one for the ages. The exciting match with massive top four implications had numerous plot twists and turns, and plenty of questionable calls. There were calls that went against the interests of both sides in this one.

Liverpool Winger Mo Salah was best described by the announcer today in today’s 2-2 home draw versus Tottenham Hotspur: “the man has defied physics.” The observation, which came on what almost everybody thought would be the game winning score, only barely qualifies as hyperbole.

Victor Wanyama may have scored the goal of the season during his side’s 2-2 draw at Liverpool. The POWERFUL scoring strike was a very memorable moment in a match that was absolutely overflowing with them. The final eight minutes were a total roller coaster ride of emotions for both sides, and it’s going to take awhile for us to recap and analyze it all.

For now, let’s have a look at the Victor Wanyama goal, which came in with as high a velocity as you’ll ever see. Watch below:

Tottenham Hotspur midfielder Dele Alli was booked for diving in the 69′ at Anfield today, and it opened the floodgates to a deluge of jokes on Twitter. Alli threw himself down to the grass when Liverpool defender Dejan Lovren ran alongside him in the penalty area, but didn’t even touch him.

The referee then showed the young Englishman a yellow card in the 69′ of the 2-2 draw. It was a memorable moment in a match that was overflowing with them. The final eight minutes were complete mayhem, and it’s going to take a few minutes for all of us to recap and assess it all.

We knew this back on December 10, after the result of the Manchester Derby, but today Manchester United manager Jose Mourinho publicly said what most of us have known for the past couple months already- Manchester City will win the Premier League title this season.

For the past month, we’ve been more consumed with Euros, pounds, dollars, speculation, gossip, rumors, transfer fees, speculation and medicals than the actual game itself. Yes, the January transfer window, typically lacking in major activity and big news, was action packed with very substantial deals in 2018.

With the January transfer window having closed yesterday, let’s take a look at how some of the big clubs did, and analyze the most significant deals. In this article, we take a look at two London clubs, who accomplished a lot this January transfer window, but weren’t exactly outstanding. Chelsea and Tottenham Hotspur did much better than average transfer business this past month, but there are certainly some nits to pick.